Golden Rule of becoming a native Cantonese speaker: Tones > Everything!
In this blog, we use Jyutping to indicate the pronunciation of Cantonese characters.
Previous lesson: Rimes with e
In this lesson, we talk about Rimes with u
, yu
. Here we use u
similar to languages like German or Italian.
And yu
is equivalent to “ü” in German. Let’s take a look.
Rimes with u
For u
, ui
, un
, ut
, u sounds like “oo” in “foo”.
For ung
and uk
, u sound like “one” in “tone”.
Jyutping | Sounds in English | Cantonese Example | Jyutping | Sounds in English | Cantonese Example |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
u | oo in foo | 夫 | ut | oot in boot | 闊 |
ui | ewy in chewy1 | 灰 | ung | one in tone | 風 |
un | oon in cartoon | 歡 | uk | ook in cook | 福 |
1“Chewy” is two syllables, but in Cantonese this is a diphthong. So try to blend it into one sound, treat the “ew” as the major sound and the “j” as a small tip at the end of the syllable.
Rimes with yu
Unfortunately, in English there is no word sound exactly as yu
.
But you can imitate it by positioning your tongue more forward, closer to your front teeth (not touching them!), and try to say the word “foo”.
In some accents, when people say the word “occupy” or “education”, they may use the yu
sound as well.
Jyutping | Sounds in English | Cantonese Example | Jyutping | Sounds in English | Cantonese Example |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
yu | u in occupy | 書 | yut | uned in tuned | 雪 |
yun | une in tune | 酸 |
Next lesson: Tones
Further reading: Jyutping, The linguistic Society of Hong Kong
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